Mating spool assemblies for reducing stress concentrations

ABSTRACT

A plastic spool for receiving, storing and dispensing wire and cable is formed of multiple pieces. A preferred design is assembled in two halves, each having a tube portion and a flange portion. The tube portions have stepped, mating diameters. The tube portion of one half is stepped on the inside diameter and the tube portion of the other half is stepped on the outside diameter to match. The spool may be assembled in three pieces. The halves or pieces may be bonded together, such as by spin welding, hot plate welding, ultrasonic welding or induction welding. In some embodiments, the pieces may be fastened mechanically. Larger spools, usually referred to as reels may be configured to receive a tube into a channel formed in each flange. The channel wall may extend outboard of the inside flange wall, permitting a penetrating fastener to secure the tube to the channel wall without making any blemish or bump which might damage wire in the wrapping region around the tube between the flanges.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional application of the application Ser. No.08/147,138, filed Nov. 3, 1993, for a Mating Spool Assembly, now U.S.Pat. No. 5,464,171.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1.Field of the Invention

The invention pertains to manufacture of spools and reels generally, andmore particularly to plastic spools and reels for receiving electricalwire and cable during manufacture and for subsequent handling, storageand dispensing thereof.

2. State of the Art

Stranded materials, upon manufacture, are typically taken up directlyonto a reel or spool. The take-up spool or reel receives the stranddirectly from the last step in the manufacturing process. Thereafter,the filled spool is effective for storage and handling purposes. Uponsale or distribution, the spool is often placed on an arbor, eitheralone or with other spools, for convenient dispensing of the linear orstranded material. Linear or stranded materials include electrical wirewhether in single or multiple strands and cable (comprised of multiplewires), rope, wire rope, hose, tubing, chain and plastic and rubberprofile material (generally any polymeric or elastomeric extrudedflexible material). In general, a host of elongate materials as diverseas pharmaceutical unit dose packages, fiberoptic line and log chains arestored on spools. Likewise, ribbon, thread and other stranded materialsare wrapped on spools.

The requirement for a spool in the manufacture and handling of wire issubstantially different than spools in the textile industry. Forexample, the weight of wire is several times the weight of thread orrope. The bulk of wire, which translates to the inverse of density, issubstantially lower for wire than for hose, tubing or even chain.

Meanwhile, most spools are typically launched on a one way trip. Thecollection and recycling of spools is hardly worth the effort,considering that their materials are not easily recyclable.

In the art, a typical spool has a tube portion extending between twoflange portions positioned at either end of the tube portion. Forexample, one tube has a standard 2-inch outside diameter piece while theflanges conventionally have a 61/2-inch outside diameter. Typically, aspool has a rounded rim or rolled edge at the outermost diameter. Thisrim serves structural as well as aesthetic and safety purposes. Spoolsmay be manufactured in a variety of tube lengths and thus are typicallymanufactured as three-piece units. That is, the tube is a molded, orpreferably extruded, piece. The tube can be cut to length from standardextruded stock. Each flange has an insertion portion, which is fittedinside one end of the tube and there bonded.

As a result of the requirement for bonding, most. plastic spools knownin the art are manufactured of polystyrene oracrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS). Although the impact performanceof styrene is rather poor, ABS is substantially better. A variety ofwell known solvents can be used to bond styrene-based polymers. Alsogiven the structural and cost requirements, the amount of plastic in aspool dictates inexpensive styrene-based plastics.

Olefinic plastics, including polyethylene, polymethylpentene,polybutadiene, polypropylene and the like cannot be bonded withsolvents. As a result, the multipiece spools known in the art do not usepolyolefins, also called olefinic plastics, olefin polymers orpolyolefins.

A spool of wire 61/2-inches in diameter may weigh twenty pounds. A spoolor reel 12 inches in diameter may weigh over a hundred pounds. Theimpact load of a twenty-pound spool of wire dropping from a bench orother work surface to a floor in a manufacturing environment (a commonform of drop test or impact test) is sufficient to fracture the spool inany of several places, releasing the wire in a tangled, useless mass.

Spools may break at the corner where the tube portion meets the flangeportion or may fracture at an engagement portion along the tube portion.Three-piece spools typically break near the corner between the flangeand the tube portion where a joint bonds the tube portion to the flangeportion.

Because multi-piece spools often break at the joints, applicantdeveloped the two-piece polystyrene spool having a two-inch outsidediameter for the tube and a 1/2 inch engagement length on a single step.The step is formed on each mating half of the spool, each halfcomprising a flange on a tube portion. The step is essentially formedwith a right angle shoulder. Each of the edges on the inside and outsideright angles forming the axial ends of the step is broken. A broken edgeindicates that the burr is removed from exterior corners of tooling andthe internal corners are chamfered slightly to prevent a burr on afinished part. A broken edge is cut approximately 0.005 inches on anedge of the chamfer or fillet as appropriate.

Each step, male and female, has a wall thickness of half the thicknessof the wall thickness of the tube. The two-piece spool employs a firsthalf comprising a flange portion and a tube portion assembled with asecond half comprising a second flange portion and a second tubeportion. The first half is made to receive the second half along anengagement area. A step on the male half of the spool and a step insidethe female half of the spool allow a matched fit which can be solidlybonded. The joint is typically located such that the break in theoutside surface appears at the middle of the resulting tube length. Thejoint is thus located at a maximum distance from the flange.

A three-piece spool is the industry standard for spools of 61/2 -inchdiameter. The typical length of the engagement portion on each end isapproximately one eighth to one quarter of an inch. Nevertheless, thetwo-piece spools having half-inch engagement length still experiencesome breakage during drop tests when manufactured in styrene orstyrene-based plastics such as ABS.

Polyolefins are very tough materials. Tough means that a material cantolerate a relatively large amount of straining or stretching beforerupture. By contrast, a material which is not tough will usuallyfracture rather than stretch extensively. As a result, when a reel ofwire is dropped (a standard drop test or impact test), the energy ofimpact breaks the spool. Polyolefins, by contrast, may actually be drawnpast yielding into their plastic elongation region on a stress-strainchart. Polyolefins thus elongate a substantial distance. The result isthat olefinic plastics will absorb a tremendous amount of energy locallywithout rupture. Thus, the wire on a spool which has been dropped doesnot become a tangled mat of loops.

Given their toughness, olefinic parts will bend, strain, distort, butusually not break. Nevertheless, olefinic plastics are not typical inthe art of wire spools. Polyolefin parts are not bonded into multi-piecespools, however. Lack of a solvent is one problem, lack of a durableadhesive is another. Therefore, any spool would have to be manufacturedas unit of a specific size. The inventory management problem created byunique spools of various sizes is untenable. Although the cost of someolefinic resins is lower than that of styrene-based resins. Moreover,the cycle time of molds directly related to material properties isusually much faster for styrene-based resins. The designs available usewall thicknesses which result in warpage as well. All these factors andmore combine to leave olefinic resins largely unused in the spoolindustry, as is the design of bonded parts for spools from olefinicresins.

What is needed is a small diameter (typically 61/2-inch outsidediameter) plastic spool, which can tolerate the energy of being dropped(drop tested) when fully wrapped with wire. In addition, even in thestandard styrene-based plastic spools, a better tube design than thesingle step type is desired. In drop tests, a spool may be droppedaxially, radially or canted off-axis. In a radial drop, spools thatbreak typically fail near the middle of the length of the tube. In axialdrops, flanges may separate from tubes in failed spools. In an off-axisdrop, flanges typically fracture.

Large spools are typically called reels in the wire industry. Heavy-dutyreels of 12 inches in diameter and greater (6 feet and 8 feet arecommon) are often made of wood or metal. Plastic spools of 12-inchdiameter and greater are rare and tend to be very complex. The rationaleis simple. Inexpensive plastics are not sufficiently strong to tolerateeven ordinary use with such a large mass of wire or cable wrapped aroundthe spool.

Moreover, large flanges for reels are very difficult to manufacture.Likewise, the additional manufacturing cost of large spools isproblematic. High speed molding requires quick removal after a shortcycle time. Flanges are typically manufactured to have very thick walls.Increased thicknesses directly lengthen cycle times. Thus designs do notscale up. Therefore, the flanges have very slow cooling times andmolding machines have low productivity in producing them.

Styrene plastic is degraded by recycling. That is, once styrene has beeninjection molded, the mechanical properties of the resulting plastic aredegraded. Thus, if a spool is recycled, ground up into chunks or beadsand re-extruded as part of another batch, the degradation in quality canbe substantial. Olefinic plastics improve over styrene-based plastics inthat olefinic plastics can be completely recyclable. The mechanicalproperties of an olefinic plastic are virtually identical for regroundstock as for virgin stock.

In reels, a 12-inch diameter unit is instructive. Such a spool isusually manufactured of wood. Nevertheless, a plastic spool in 12-inchdiameter may also be manufactured with a pair of plastic flanges holdinga layered cardboard (paperboard) tube detained therebetween. The flangesare typically bolted together axially to hold the tube within or withouta circumferential detent as with wooden reels.

The reels have an additional difficulty when they are dropped during useor a testing equivalent. The flanges do not stay secured. One difficultywith the structural integrity of the three-piece reel design is that thetube is not fastened to the flange. The flange and tube are oftenprecarious wooden assemblies held together by three or more axial boltscompressing the flanges together. The tube is prone to slip with respectto the flanges, breaking, tilting or otherwise losing its integrityunder excessive loads. Such loads result from the impact of droppingonto a floor from a bench height or less. For the largest reels, rollingover or into obstacles or from decks during handling is more likely tobe the cause of damage.

Very large cables, having an outside diameter up to several inches istaken up during manufacturing on a very large reel, from two feet toeight feet in diameter. The current state of the art dictates woodenreels comprised of flanges capturing a barrel-like tube of longitudinalslats therebetween. The two flanges are held together by a plurality oflong bolts extending therethrough. Wooden reels are not typicallyrecyclable. A splinter or blemish in a reel can damage insulation on newcable or wire wrapped therearound at the manufacturing plant. Damagedinsulation destroys much of the value of a reel of cable or wire. Thatis, the wire must be spliced, or may have damage extending over severalwrapped layers of wire. Splices segmenting the original length of wirewrapped on the reel add costs in labor, reliability, service and thelike.

Wood cannot be recycled and reconstructed cost effectively. In addition,the plurality of bolts and nails must be removed with other relatedmetal hardware. The reels do not effectively burn without the laborinvestment of this dismantling operation.

Also, a wooden reel that is slightly out of adjustment, damaged, orbroken, is problematic. A broken reel leaves a large area splintered todamage wire insulation. A reel which is loose will tilt and twist as theslats shift with respect to the flanges.

Steel reels tend to be more frequently recyclable. However, each must bereturned in its original form to be reused. Thus, the bulk of transferis as large as the bulk of original shipment, although the weight isless. Also, steel is heavy, subject to damage by the environment such asby stains, rust, peeling of paint, denting, accumulation of coatings orcreation of small burrs on surfaces and corners. For example, when areel is rolled over a hard surface, sharp objects, grit or rocks tend toraise small burrs of the outer edge of the flange. Similarly, contactwith any sharp or hard object can raise burrs on the inside surfaces ofthe flanges.

As with wooden reels, only to a greater extent, a burr on a steel reeltends to act like a knife, slicing through insulation and ruining wire.Perhaps the most difficult aspect of burrs is that they are hardlydetectable at sizes which are nevertheless highly damaging toinsulation. Of course the weight and cost of steel reels is anotherfactor in the difficulty of employing them for delivery of cable.

What is needed in large reels of from a foot to eight feet approximatelyin outside flange diameter is a reel which is dimensionally stable,maintains structural integrity in service and during accidentaldropping, which will not fracture or separate at a flange if it isdropped, and which is economically recyclable. In a large reel, on theorder of two to eight feet in diameter, what is needed is a lightweight,high-strength reel. The reel should not tend to damage wire whenscratched, gouged, or otherwise having a burr raised on any key surface.Similarly, a large reel should be resilient enough that it does notmaintain a permanent set, such as a steel reel will, when damaged. Aplastic reel should be formed of a material which is tough. The materialshould be flexible enough that a burr will not damage insulation.Finally, a large reel should be recyclable. Recycling is most efficientif a reel can be reground near the site of use. Empty reels are morevoluminous than they are heavy.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention solves this multiplicity of problems with plastic spoolsand reels formed in a multi-piece structure preferably by molding fromolefinic plastics. Some of the designs may be manufactured instyrene-based plastics, but the design are particularly well adapted tomanufacture using molded polyethylene and polypropylene or similarolefinic plastics.

The structures and methods of the invention apply to spools and reels ofall sizes. Notwithstanding a structure which can be injection molded ina 61/2-inch flange diameter my have to be roto-molded (tumble-molded) inan eight foot size, the invention applies. Similarly, notwithstanding ahot-air welding technique may be more cost-effective than spin-weldinglarge reels, the structures of the invention apply. Likewise,notwithstanding that ribs may need to be wider or longer or spacedsomewhat differently, the structures of the invention typically apply toall sizes of spools.

The invention, in one embodiment, comprises a two-piece spool formed oftwo mated halves joined in an engagement region near the center of thetubular portion of the spool. The mated parts fit one inside the otherat the tube portions leaving a smooth outer surface on the tube. Thetube portions are bonded at the diameters of two engagement surfacesformed as stepped, tubular sections.

In an alternate embodiment, the mated tubular sections are comprised ofmated cones which intimately contact along their surfaces where they arebonded to one another. In another alternate embodiment, the engagementportion is comprised of mated cylindrical sleeves fitted one inside theother and each involving a single step from the nominal inside andoutside diameters, respectively, of the tubular portion of therespective halves of the unassembled spool. In this embodiment, theengagement portion extends a width greater than one quarter of thediameter of the spool for a proper bearing surface for carrying loads.This structure is improved also by forming the radial plane of thejoints carefully. Typically the visible joint on the outer diameter ofthe tube is located at the middle of the tube between the flanges, thelocation called the midline or midplane, as opposed to the axialcenterline through the tube.

To overcome the break in the outside surface at the outermost fiber ofthe material, and to reduce stress concentrations, the single-step spoolis made by offsetting the joint axially away from the midline ormidplane of the tube between the flanges. To a certain extent,additional length is helpful, but especially so with the othermodifications herein described. Also, radiused corners at the junctionof each shoulder and step surface are used, even including radii aslarge as the full wall thickness of a step, that is, the shoulder'sradial dimension. Likewise, a clearance on the inside abutting shouldersis used to assure a full butt joint at the outside diameter of the tube.A tapered step, resulting in two conical surfaces, one on the male partand one on the female part, registered at a leading and trailingshoulder to ensure proper length between the flanges, is an idealconnection scheme. With properly radiused corners at all shoulders, thisconstruction can be made to give a nearly seamless strength, virtuallyequivalent to a tube having no joint.

In yet another embodiment of the spool, a flange portion is manufacturedhaving a stub of a tube protruding from one side. A tube, manufacturedby either extrusion or molding is formed to have an inside diameter tomate with a step on the stub of the flange. A flange is placed on oneend of the tubular center member (tube) and a second flange is placed onthe opposite end of the tubular center member. In the preferredembodiment, an engagement portion on the stub of the flange is formed tomate at two diameters with the engagement portion of the tubular memberwhich is also stepped for a mated fit over the stub.

In the preferred embodiment of the spool in larger sizes, intermediatesized reels (on the order of 12 inches to 2 feet outside flangediameter) are comprised of a tube or central portion manufactured ofwound, layered paperboard or from a polymer tube. Under somecircumstances, the central tube may be manufactured of a thin-walled,rolled, steel or sheet metal tube. A good choice is extruded plastictube.

In the preferred embodiment of the invention, a channel is formed toextend axially outboard of an inner face of the principal wall offlange. The channel is formed between an internal support sleeve fittedto the inside surface of the tube and a channel wall, an inside rim onthe flange, formed to fit around the outer diameter of the tube at oneend. The flange also has an outer rim protruding axially outward, normalto the wall or face of the flange. The outer rim is positioned at theoutermost diameter of the flange for adding structural strength andrigidity.

The inner rim is accessible from the axially outboard end of the reelfor radial penetration of a fastener through the inner rim, and throughthe tube. In the preferred embodiment, a fastener penetrates not onlythe inner rim and tube, but also the support sleeve interior to thetube, thus sandwiching the tube for additional structural strength. Inone embodiment, the inner rim has splines formed along the insidediameter thereof and running axially therealong for providing improvedgripping of the tube between the support sleeve and the splines. In analternate embodiment, the splines are positioned on the support sleeveto contact the inside surface of the tube. However, since tubes aretypically formed on a mandrel, the inside diameter is more precise, sosplines are more useful on the outside diameter where fit is likely tobe poorer. By the same token, a plastic tube is usually extruded andthus has a more precise outside diameter. Thus, splines on the inside(around the support sleeve) would be preferred in such a configuration.

In an alternate embodiment, the inner rim has conduits formed therein,each having an internal aperture for receiving a pin to force the tubeoutwardly toward the inner rim. In the preferred embodiment, the pinshave a barbed edge in contact with the inside surface of the tube,carrying the pins. In an alternate embodiment, a barb is formed on thesupport sleeve itself to protrude slightly outwardly therefrom forengaging the inner surface of the tube or for engaging a hole formed ordrilled radially through the tube at the proper location to engage thebarb.

As with the splines, the barbs fitted to mathing holes in the tube arepreferably placed to contact the tube surface which is most preciselyand repeatedly located. Thus, in the case of cardboard tubes, barbspreferably engage holes on the inside diameter, while barbs wouldpreferably engage holes in the outside diameter of extruded plastictubes. Nevertheless, if barbs do not engage holes, but simply depressthe surface of the tube, then barbs tend to serve the fitting functionsof splines as well as the holding function. In such configurations, thebarbs would preferably be located on a flange to engage the leastprecise surface of the tube.

In one embodiment, an inner core or supporting sleeve on the flangeprotrudes into the tube. The supporting sleeve may be made as the insidewall of a channel or may extend directly into a tube, the tube havingits ends abutted directly against the respective faces of each flange. Afastener penetrates the tube and anchors the tube onto the supportingsleeve. A tape or other covering is usually placed over the fastener toprevent any sharp edges or bumps from damaging the insulation of thewire wrapped around the tube in service.

In the preferred embodiment of all reels, the walls are formed bythin-walled molding processes. Thin-walled molding produces a wall, web,or rim which has a thickness on the order of half an order of magnitudesmaller than the height thereof. That is, for a rib height ofapproximately one-half inch, a rib thickness of between 1/20th and 1/5thof an inch would be a thin wall. Flanges of the spools and of the reelsare formed to have reinforcing ribs manufactured with thin-walledtechnology.

An additional aspect of the invention is the bonding technology used. Inall spools and reels wherein the tube is formed of a polymer, thebonding is by a cohesive bonding technique Using the base materialwithout a solvent. That is, ultrasonic welding, spin welding, hot platewelding, hot air welding and inductive (inductance) welding are used tobond the circumferencial surfaces of the steps together or to bond theaxial faces which form the shoulders of each step together, or both. Forall styrene-based plastics, the bonding methods include solvent-basedadhesives, with or without filler materials.

A spool comprises a first portion for receiving an elongate materialwrapped therearound. In the preferred embodiment, the first portion ismated along at least two diameters inside a second portion for retainingthe elongate material on the first portion. An additional engagementlength greater than one quarter of a tube diameter has been found togreatly improve breakage rates. In an alternate embodiment, the firstportion is mated at a single diameter to the second portion. However, inthis configuration, the engagement length should be greater than halfthe tube diameter. Moreover, to function as desired, the engagementshould include a butt joint of the end of the female part at theshoulder of the male part to prevent any break in the outermost surfaceof the tube. Likewise, the shoulders of the female steps are preferablyradiused at a radius equal to the thickness of the step. The radius hasa value of at least 0.015 inches, but is preferably between 50 and 100percent of the shoulder height at the radiused step.

The first portion is comprised of a tubular portion for holding theelongate material wrapped therearound and a flange portion for retainingthe elongate material on the tubular portion. The second portion iscomprised of a tubular portion for holding an elongate material wrappedtherearound and a flange portion for retaining the elongate materialthereon.

A two-piece spool is formed in two parts in which each piece or partincludes a flange and a tubular portion that fits a mated portion of thetubular portion of the opposite piece to form a central tube of thespool.

In one embodiment, a conical surface of the first portion and a conicalsurface of the second portion are bonded along a surface of intimatecontact. In another embodiment, the two tubular portions of therespective first and second portions are mated together on each of twomutual cylindrical surfaces having different diameters. The matedsurface is the surface where two surfaces, a surface from each of twopieced, come together.

One embodiment employs a single step. Mated parts of the tubular portionof each first and second portion have a step width in excess of onequarter of the outside diameter of the tubular portion. However, in thepreferred embodiment, surfaces on at least two steps (having twodiameters other than the principal inner and outer diameters of thetube) are formed in the tubular portion of each first and secondportion. The surfaces of mated steps are engaged in intimate contact.

A step, as the term is used herein is a distinct wall portion of atubular member having an inner and outer diameter and a length. Ashoulder is a planar annulus normal to the longitudinal axis of thetubular member having an inner and outer diameter. A step surface has adiameter and a length, being normal to a radius of the tubular member.

In another embodiment, the spool further includes a third portionattached to an end of the second portion opposite the first portion forretaining the elongate material between the first portion and the thirdportion. In another embodiment, it is the third portion which isattached to an end of the first portion opposite the second portion forretaining an elongate material between the second portion and the thirdportion. This just allows for mating in either direction. That is,either the first or second portion can be the male or female part moldedin the female or male half of the mold, respectively.

In one embodiment, the spool comprises a first member having a proximalend and a distal end. The first member comprises a first tubular portionat the distal end for holding a strand of material wrapped thereon and afirst flange portion connected to the proximal end of the first tubularportion for retaining the strand of material on the first tubularportion.

The first tubular portion comprises a first wall having a first insidesurface and extending longitudinally from the distal end of the secondmember toward the proximal end thereof to a point proximate a firstlongitudinal position. A second wall has a second inside surface andextends longitudinally away from a point proximate the first position toa second position. A third wall has a third inside surface and extendsfrom proximate the second position to a third position proximate theproximal end of the first member.

A second member mates to the first member and has a proximal end and adistal end. The second member comprises a second tubular portion at aproximal end thereof for holding a strand of material thereon and asecond flange portion connected to the distal end of the second tubularportion for retaining the strand of material on the second tubularportion. The second tubular portion comprises a cylinder having avariety of wall thicknesses creating surfaces to mate with the firsttubular portion. A first step having a first outside diameter is fittedto the second inside surface and is substantially longitudinallycoextensive therewith. A second step has a second outside diameterfitted to the first inside surface and is substantially longitudinallycoextensive therewith. An outer surface has a third outside diameter andextends from proximate the second step to the second flange proximatethe distal end of the second tubular member.

In one preferred embodiment, the first member and the second member areboth molded of an olefinic plastic. Olefinic plastics includepolyethylene and polypropylene. The olefinic plastics have excellenttoughness. In one embodiment the first and second members of olefinicplastic are bonded together.

The current state of the spool assembly art employs solvent bondingusing a glue which may be an adhesive in its own right, but whichprincipally contains a solvent for softening the styrene-based plastics.Upon evaporation of the solvent, the softened parts bond at the pointsof contact. The preferred method of manufacturing the spool of theinvention comprises the steps of molding a first part from an olefinicplastic material, molding a second part from an olefinic plasticmaterial and then bonding the first part to the second part. Bonding mayinclude ultrasonic welding, hot plate welding or spin welding the firstpart to the second part. Spin welding is a preferred method. Inductionwelding is also possible. These methods will be discussed in some detailherein.

Molding involves injecting an olefinic plastic resin into a mold andwaiting for the resin to solidify. The method of the invention requiresless than 120 seconds of waiting before opening the mold. The part ispreferably removed immediately upon opening of the mold. Parts can bemade properly according to the invention by waiting for less than 60seconds, and in some embodiments, less than 15 seconds before openingthe mold. In one method of the invention, the entire cycle time frommold opening until mold opening is only 12 seconds. The method requiresa design having thin walls and a cooled mold having high thermalconductivity and a liquid cooling system to cool areas enclosing acomparatively larger mass of resin.

A spool comprises a first part formed of an olefinic plastic forreceiving a stranded material wrapped therearound. A second part isformed of an olefinic plastic and bonded to the first part for retainingthe stranded material on the first part. In one embodiment, the firstpart is further comprised of a first tubular portion and a first flangeportion. The second part is comprised of a second tubular portion and asecond flanged portion. A surface of the first tube portion is bondedproximate one end of the first tube to a surface of the second tubeportion proximate one end of the second tube portion. In an alternateembodiment, the first part is a tubular member and the second partincludes a flange. A third part includes a flange and is attached to oneend of the tubular first part. The third part is attached at the end ofthe tube opposite the second part.

The first flange portion of a spool may further comprise ribs forstiffening the first flange portion. Likewise, the second flange portionfurther preferably comprises ribs for stiffening the second flangeportion.

In larger sizes, spools having a flange diameter greater than or equalto 12 inches are called reels. A reel for receiving an elongate strandof material comprises a tube for receiving an elongate strand wrappedtherearound. A first flange is formed to hold one end of the tube. Asecond flange is formed to hold the other end of the tube. The firstflange comprises a first wall substantially normal to a longitudinalaxis along the tube for retaining the elongate strand on the tube. Thefirst wall has an inner face and an outer face. A second wall extendsbehind or outside the first flange away from the outer face in alongitudinal (axial) direction. The second wall intersects the firstwall substantially normal thereto and surrounds the tube for securingthe tube from moving relative to the first wall. A fastener ispreferably secured to penetrate through the second wall in the tube tosecure the tube thereto.

The reel may include splines attached to an inside surface of the secondwall for applying force to the tube by contacting the tube. The firstflange further comprises an end wall connected to the first wall,parallel thereto and spaced away therefrom. A support sleeve extendsfrom the end wall into the tube at the one end for supporting the tube.The second flange likewise comprises an equivalent end wall and a secondsupport sleeve extending into the tube at the other end for supportingthe tube.

In an alternate embodiment, securement means may be connected to thesupport sleeve and the second support sleeve for fastening the tube tothe first and second flanges respectively. The securement means mayinclude a barbed surface. For example, a barbed pin can be used forengaging the tube at an inside surface thereof. Also, a barbed fingerfor engaging the tube may be attached to the tubular member associatedwith flange, and holes formed in the tube receive and retain the barb.

As discussed above, the splines and barbs not fitted to holes arepreferably positioned to contact the tube on the side of the wall havingthe least precision of manufacture. For wrapped paper tubes, the insidesurface of the tube is most precise. For extruded plastic tubes, theoutside surface is most precise. Barbs fitted to holes in the tube arepreferably positioned to engage the more precise surface.

The first flange preferably comprises ribs attached at inner edgesthereof to a plate to extend between an inner rim and an outer rim. Theinner rim and the outer rim extend away from the plate to a distanceoutside the ribs. This configuration protects a label attached to theouter edges of the ribs, since the label is not exposed to wear fromcontacting other objects.

A strand is a segment of material having a very long aspect in onedirection compared to two other aspects of approximately the same orderof magnitude. For example, the string in a roll or ball of string has adiameter which is many orders of magnitude less than its length. Theribbon on a roll or reel may have a thickness and width within one ortwo orders of magnitude of each other while the length is many orders ofmagnitude larger than either. Likewise, a stock of electrical wire,electrical cable, rope, wire rope, chain, tubular stock, plastic profilematerial or the like wrapped around a roll, spool or reel will usuallyhave several orders of magnitude difference between the smallest aspect(thickness) and the largest aspect (length).

Mated parts are parts which fit one inside the other with an insidesurface of the one part in intimate contact with an outside surface ofthe other part by gluing, melting, bonding, slip fit, interference fit,mechanical detents or the like. For example, the double-stepped outsidediameters of one tube portion fit into the double-stepped insidediameters of the other tube portion. A first surface of an inner stepfits inside a first surface of an outer step in intimate contact attheir one mutual diameter within manufacturing practice and tolerances.Meanwhile, a second surface of a second step fits inside a secondsurface of a second wall in intimate contact at their other mutualdiameter. Likewise, two mated parts may be bonded together along themated conical surfaces of each. The two surfaces are in intimatecontact, the contact extending between a first and second diametercontinuously.

Ribs are not simply bosses having a height of less than the order ofmagnitude of the web thickness of a flange. Rather, ribs have an aspectratio of height to thickness on the order of approximately five. In thepreferred embodiment of a 12-inch reel, thin ribs having a thickness of0.1 inches have a height of 0.5 inches from the Surface extend away atright angles to the surface of the member that they stiffen. In thepreferred embodiment of a 61/2-inch spool, the ribs on the flange have athickness of 0.05 inches and a height of 0.25 inches approximately.

As a practical matter, all webs in a flange preferably have the samethickness. Thus, the rib, the underlying flange wall stiffened by therib, and the rim running along the circumference of the flange alltypically have the same thickness. Although different thickness may bepreferred for structural optimization, manufacturing considerations suchas cycle time optimization dictate uniform thicknesses throughout.

Barbs are ramp-shaped members such as notched brads, pins, sleeves, orfingers. One surface slopes away from a longitudinal axis through theelongate pin, brad, sleeve or finger and then suddenly, precipitouslyangles back toward the axis. Thus, a tooth-like barb may be a hook-likefinger in which the protruding "barb" sinks into the wound paperboardtube. Such a finger may be laterally depressed during insertion into apaperboard tube or a plastic tube, springing back into a pocket or holein the wall of the tube to form a locking mechanism. The barb may berelatively stiff or rigid, holding the tube by friction or localizeddepression or by localized gouging.

In one embodiment, the flange is made of a plate or wall positionednormal to the axis of the tube. On one side of the plate, an inner faceof the plate faces the tube, while an outer face is on an opposite sideof the plate. An inner rim extends in a circular cross section from theplate and may itself terminate in a back plate at an edge of the rimspaced away from the plate in either longitudinal direction along theaxis. The ribs extend parallel to the axis a distance away from theplate. An outer rim is attached to the plate at its outermost diameter.Thus the ribs extend between the inner rim and the outer rim and extendaway from the plate.

In one embodiment, the height of the ribs away from the plate is lessthan the heights of the inner rim and the outer rim, which arepreferably equal. In this manner, a recessed area exists below the innerand outer rims for receiving a label glued to the ribs. In stacking andhandling, the label on the spool or reel will not be damaged but willremain readable.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is an isometric view of the two halves of the two-step spool ofthe invention before assembly.

FIG. 2. is a cross-sectional elevation view of two-step spool of FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is an isometric view of the two halves of the single-step spoolof the invention before assembly.

FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional elevation view of the single-step spool ofFIG. 4.

FIG. 5 is a partial, detailed, cross-sectional view of the engagementregion of the tubular members of the single step spool of the invention.

FIGS. 6-7 are partial, detailed, cross-sectional views of the engagementregion of the tubular members of the two-step spool of the invention.

FIG. 8 is a partial, detailed, cross-sectional view of matching steps ofthe invention configured for bonding by ultrasonic welding.

FIGS. 9A and 9B are partial perspective views of the steps of a tubularportion of a spool of the invention configured for bonding by ultrasonicwelding.

FIG. 10 is a cross-sectional end elevation view of the assembledengagement region of the tube of FIG. 9A showing energy directorsrunning axially between the step surfaces

FIGS. 11-12 are a partial, detailed, cross-sectional views of matchingsteps of the invention configured for bonding by spin welding.

FIG. 13 is a partial, detailed, cross-sectional view of matching stepsof the invention configured for bonding by hot plate welding.

FIGS. 14-15 are partial, detailed, cross-sectional views of barbs to beadded to the matching steps of the invention for mechanically securingthe tubular members together.

FIG. 16 is a partial, detailed, cross-sectional view of matching stepsof the invention configured for bonding by induction welding.

FIGS. 17A, 17B are a partial, detailed, cross-sectional views ofmatching conical steps of the invention configured for bonding assembledand unassembled, respectively.

FIGS. 18A and 18B are cross-sectional side views of the engagementregion in an alternate embodiment of a joint using matching conicalsteps.

FIGS. 19A and 19B are cross-sectional side elevation views of theengagement region of an improved single-step spool using an offset jointfor the assembled tube.

FIG. 19C is a cross-sectional side elevation view of the engagementregion of an improved single-step spool using a full-step-thicknessradius on step corners.

FIG. 19D is a cross-sectional side elevation view of the engagementregion of an improved single-step spool using radiused corners on thesteps.

FIG. 19E is a cross-sectional side elevation view of the engagementregion of an improved single-step spool using a butt joint on theoutermost fiber of the assembled tube.

FIG. 20 is an isometric view of the unassembled, three-piece spool ofthe invention.

FIGS. 21-22 are cross-sectional elevation views of the three-piece spoolof FIG. 20 showing an extruded and a stepped tube, respectively.

FIG. 23A-23D are detailed cross-sectional side elevation views of theengagement region of an improved three-piece spool of the invention.

FIG. 24A is an isometric view of a ribbed flange of the invention.

FIG. 24B is a partial, cross-sectional elevation view of the flange ofFIG. 23.

FIG. 25 is an isometric view of an unassembled reel of the invention.

FIGS. 26 and 27 are cutaway, partial, cross-sectional views of the ribsand rim of the flange of FIG. 25.

FIG. 28 is an isometric view of an unassembled reel of the invention.

FIGS. 29-30 are partial cross-sectional views of the reel of FIG. 28.

FIG. 31A is a partial detailed elevation view of the support sleeve andchannel region of the flange of the reel of FIG. 25.

FIG. 31B is a cross-sectional end elevation view of the support sleeveand tube with splines arranged on the outer surface of the supportsleeve to contact the inside surface of the tube.

FIGS. 32-34 are partial detailed elevation views of the support sleeveand securing mechanisms in the channel region of the flange of FIG. 28.

FIG. 35 is a partial, cross-sectional elevation view of an alternateembodiment of a flange on the reel of the invention.

FIG. 36 is a partial, cross-sectional elevation view of a recessed endof a flange on the reel of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention is best understood by reference to FIGS. 1-4. A spool 10is formed as a multi-step spool 11 having an insert 12 and a receiver14. In an alternate embodiment, a single step spool 15 is contemplated.

In the invention, an insert tube 16 having a tube outside diameter 17 isone of two molded portions which will form the spool 10. At a distal endof the insert tube 16, an insert flange 18 is integrally molded to theinsert tube 16 to extend to a flange diameter 19. Opposite the inserttube 16 is mated a receiver tube 20 having a tube inside diameter 21formed therein. The receiver tube 20 is integrally attached to areceiver flange 22 defined by a thickness 23 and the flange diameter 19.Together, when assembled, the insert tube 16 and the receiver tube 20form the tube 29 of the spool 10. The resulting outside surface 31 ofthe tube 29 smoothly transitions between the two component tubes, inserttube 16 and receiver tube 20.

A hub 24 is formed proximate the center of the receiver flange 22 andinsert flange 18. The hub is defined by a hub diameter 25 and an arboraperture 26 having an arbor diameter 27. In addition, a hub penetration28 is formed through the hub 24 for purposes of inserting a rotatingdriver dog or pawl (not shown) from the rotating machine on which thespool 10 is fitted to take up wire.

An inner penetration 30 is formed in the insert flange 18, with acorresponding inner penetration 30 formed in the receiver flange 22. Theinner penetration 30 is used to secure the first end of the cable orwire to the spool 10 at the start of the wrapping operation. Likewise,an outer hole 32 may be formed in the insert flange 18 and receiverflange 22 for purposes of indexing, driving, handling or inspection andfor tying the trailing end of the material strand (cable or wire) to thespool 10 after the wrapping operation.

A rim 34 formed to have an approximately circular cross section of rimdiameter 35 is formed at the edge 33 of each of the flanges 18, 22. Therim 34 functions to improve the stiffness of each of the flanges 18, 22and provides a more robust bearing surface for resting the spool 10 on asupporting surface.

The attachment of the insert 12 to the receiver 14 is best understood byreference to FIGS. 5-7 as well as FIGS. 1-4. The insert tube 16 isformed as part of the insert 12. The insert 12 comprises a portion ofthe spool 10 and includes a first inner step 36 and a second inner step38 extending axially along an engagement region 40. Fittedly matched tothe insert tube 16 is the receiver tube 20 comprising a first outer step42 and a second outer step 44 formed within the outer wall 45.

The insert 12 is staggered along a first insert shoulder 46 and a secondinsert shoulder 48, as well as a third insert shoulder 50, preferablyformed to be approximately planar, normal to the axis 13 of the spool10. Each of the shoulders 46, 48, 50 extends in a radial direction 58.

For clarity, the insert wall 51 refers to the wall of the insert tube 16and the receiver wall 45 refers to the wall of the receiver tube 20,having inside surfaces 92A, 92B, respectively. However, the walls 51, 45after bonding, become the wall 53 of the bonded tube 29.

Each of the shoulders 52, 54, 56 is thus perpendicular (normal) to anaxial direction 60. Due to the angular nature of the insert tube 16 andthe receiver tube 20, the preferred embodiment employs steps 36, 38which run continuously in the circumferential direction 62 in acompletely circular configuration.

Mated to the first inner step 36 and second inner step 38 are the secondouter step 44 and first outer step 42 respectively. That is, the firstouter step 42 and the first inner step 36 are positioned at the extremeends of their respective receiver tube 20 and insert tube 16.

In an alternate embodiment, a single outer step 64 is mated to a singleinner step 66, while a first insert shoulder 68 and a second insertshoulder 70 abut a second receiver shoulder 74 and a first receivershoulder 72, respectively. An engagement region 76 includes the stepwidths 78A, 78B formed along the tube walls 51, 45 of the insert 12 andthe receiver 14, respectively, in the embodiment of FIGS. 3-5. FIGS.19A-19E are variations on the embodiment of FIG. 5, while PIGS. 17A-18Bare more substantial variations of the embodiment of FIG. 5.

In the preferred embodiment, the step widths 78A, 78B exceed one half ofthe tube outside diameter 17. In alternate embodiments, other featuresallow a reduction in the step widths 78A, 78B. The wall thicknesses 82A,82B are preferably equal and have a value of approximately 0.105 inches.In the spool 11, the steps 42, 44, 45 vary by approximately 0.035 inchesradially from each other. In the spool 15, the steps 64, 45 vary fromone another by approximately 0.052 inches radially.

Meanwhile, the preferred dimensions for the first receiver shoulder 72and the second receiver shoulder 74 are approximately equal to those forthe second insert shoulder 70 and first insert shoulder 68,respectively. Each of the shoulders, 68, 74, have matched (withintolerances etc.) shoulder heights 79A, 77B, respectively, as theshoulders 70, 72 have matched shoulder heights 77A, 79B. The shoulderheights 77A, 77B, 79A, 79B each preferably extend in a radiallydirection 58 approximately half the wall thickness 82A, 82B of therespective tube walls 51, 45 (see FIG. 5.). However, the shoulderheights 79A, 79B need not be equal, nor need the shoulder heights 77A,77B be equal.

The step width 78A is matched to the step width 78B of the receiver tube20. Matched means approximately equal within manufacturing processes andtolerances. An additional thickness or offset (generally called a landor boss) may be developed for purposes of bonding.

In the preferred embodiment, the wall thicknesses 82A, 82B of the insert12 and receiver 14 at the insert tube 16 and receiver tube 20 are thusequal. The first step thickness 84A is not necessarily equal to thefirst step thickness 84B on the receiver tube 20. Similarly, the secondstep thickness 86A is not necessarily equal to the second step thickness86B. The heights 49A, 57A, and 59A of the shoulders 46, 48 and 50 mustbe equal to the heights 59B, 57B, and 49B of the shoulders 56, 54 and52, respectively, within manufacturing practice as to tolerance,interferences and the like required for assembly and mounting.

The result is that the first step surface 88A is bonded in intimatecontact with the second step surface 90B while the first step surface88B is bonded in intimate contact with the second step surface 90A ofthe insert. The inside surfaces 92A and 92B of the insert 12 andreceiver 14 are not critical.

On the contrary, the outside surfaces 94A and 94B of the insert tube andreceiver 14, respectively, are very important. As a practical matter, noembodiment or method should leave any flash outside the outside surfaces94A and 94B. This will become more evident as the welding techniques arediscussed.

One critical aspect of the invention, shown in FIG. 6 is thedimensioning of the first step width 96A which is co-extensive with thesecond step width 98B as the first step width 96B is co-extensive withthe second step width 98A. These step widths 96A, 96B and 98A, 98B arematched and mated surfaces engaging the insert 12 and the receiver 14 atthe insert tube 16 and the receiver tube 20. The dimensions may beslip-fit, interference-fit or may be a slip-fit with some raised patternon either or both mating surfaces. The fit is extremely important forthe various welding techniques which include ultrasonic welding, spinwelding, hot plate welding and induction welding. Solvent bonding isanother alternative, but is not a preferred alternative since thepreferred material for the spools 10 is plastic from the olefin groupincluding polyethylene and polypropelene. Bonding of olefinic plasticsmust be cohesive, melting the base material locally to form a bond.

The bonding processes are best understood by reference to FIGS. 8-16.Although illustrating a single step, each process is preferably used tobond every step in an engagement region 40, 76.

Ultrasonic welding as shown in FIGS. 8, 9A, 9B and 10 is accomplished byforming on an inner step or outer step 99A, 99B a energy director 100.The energy director 100 is attached to a surface 101A or 101B to extendaway therefrom a height 102 as shown in FIGS. 8-10. The height 102 isdictated to a certain extent by the width 104 so that the point 103 ofthe energy director 100 forms a right angle. In the embodiment shown inFIG. 8, the energy director 100 is located to run cicumferentiallyaround the shoulder 105B of the receiver 14.

Multiple energy directors 100 may be used on any surface. In thealternative, the energy director 100 can be formed to extend axiallyalong a step surface 90A, 90B, 88A, 88B as illustrated generally by thesurface 101 of FIGS. 9A-10. That is, the energy director 100 may beplaced on a female or male surface 101A, 101B on the inner step 99A ofthe insert 12 or on the outer step 99B of the receiver 14, respectively.

In the preferred embodiment, the energy director 100 has a height 102measuring approximately 0.015 inches and a width 104 of approximately0.030 inches. Ultrasonic welding is accomplished by holding the inserttube 16 together in a mated fashion with the receiver tube 20 whileapplying pressure and ultrasonic energy. Each is preferably applied inthe same direction, either axially at the insert flange 18 and receiverflange 22 or radially at the engagement region 40, 76.

In an alternate welding method, the receiver tube 20 may be bonded tothe insert tube 16 by spin welding. In FIGS. 11 and 12, the boss 106 isformed either on a step surface 107A, 107B or else on a shoulder surface105A, 105B, 109A, 109B. The boss 106 is raised a thickness 108 from thesurface 105A, 105B, 107A, 107B, 109A, 109B to which it is formed. Theparts are bonded by spinning insert tube 16 with respect to the receivertube 20 while pressing the insert tube 16 and receiver tube 20 together.The resulting friction melts the boss 106 to form a cohesive bondbetween the materials of the insert tube 16 and receiver tube 20. Whenthe spinning stops, the parts cool and the melted material in theengagement region 40, 76 solidifies under pressure.

In the preferred embodiment, the thickness 108 should be approximately0.02 inches for a snugly fitted pair of parts. That is, the actualinterference should be approximately 0.02 inches. The width 110 of theboss 106 is at least 0.02 inches, and is preferably 0.10 inches in atube 29 having a 2-inch outside diameter 37. As a general proposition, athickness of the boss 106 should be between approximately 2% and 20% ofthe wall thickness 263 of a tube 29, with 10% being preferable. In theembodiment of FIG. 12, the width 110 might conceivably run across theentire underlying surface 107B. The axial and circumferentialorientations of the energy directors 100 of FIGS. 9A, 9B and 10 couldalso be applied to the bosses 106 with the appropriate dimensions abovefor spin welding of the embodiment of FIG. 12.

FIG. 13 shows an embodiment suitable for hot plate welding. In hot platewelding, surfaces 107A, 107B are held lightly against heated metalsurfaces (not shown) until the plastic begins to flow at the surface ofthe heated metal. The surfaces 107A, 107B are quickly moved parallel toone another in an axial direction, and held under axial pressure. Anyflash which results is left to remain inside the inside surface 92A, 92B(see FIG. 7). The step surfaces 107A, 107B are formed to have aninterference 112 of approximately 0.030 inches. When the insert 12 ispushed under load into the receiver 14, the interference 112 iseliminated as a cohesive bond is formed between the surfaces 107A, 107B.In the preferred embodiment, the shoulder 105A abuts the shoulder 109Bwhile the shoulder 105B abuts the shoulder 109A.

In the embodiments in FIGS. 14 and 15, a mechanical, quasi-removableconnection is made by relying on a barb 114 in an aperture 116. The barb114 is cantilevered away from the receiver tube 20 on the arm or finger118 snapping clear of the receiver tube 20 into the aperture 116. Such amechanical connection as shown in FIG. 14 may be made reversible(removable) with proper tooling, but represents a secure manufacturingapproach regardless. A number of barbs 114 are distributed around thecircumferential direction 62 of the insert tube 16 and are matched withapertures 116 formed at corresponding cicumferential locations in thereceiver tube 20. In all configurations using barbs 114, a barb 114 canbe positioned on the opposite part from that shown, the mating part,while the aperture 116 is formed in place of the barb 114 shown.

The embodiment of FIG. 15 similarly uses a pair of barb-like ridges120A, 120B which are forced to fit within matching recesses 122B, 122A,respectively. Each of the ridges 120A, 120B is either continuous orinterrupted around the circumferential direction 62 of the insert tube16 and receiver tube 20.

FIG. 16 shows a layer 124 of an electromagnetic thermoplastic compoundplaced on the step surface 107B of the receiver tube 20 for inductionwelding. The layer 124 may be in the form of a paste, tape, moldedshape, or extruded sleeve. The layer 124 is comprised of a materialwhich will produce eddy currents and associated eddy current heatingwhen placed in an inductive field. For example, iron oxide powder ormetallic particles may be used. Bonding is accomplished by assemblingthe insert tube 16 and receiver tube 20 and placing the engagementregion 40 (see FIG. 2) in an inductive field. Upon creation of theinductive field, the layer 124 builds up heat from the eddy currentswithin it, melting nearby material to form a bond when cooled. Thematerial of the insert tube 16 and the material of the receiver tube 20and the layer bond together, typically.

The layer 124 has a thickness 126 of approximately 0.0005-0.020 inchesand a width 128 covering the underlying surface 107B. Of course, thelayer 124 may be applied to the corresponding surface 107A of the inserttube 16, but that approach is not preferred as it may blemish the spool.Likewise, in this configuration, a tolerance suitable to receive thelayer 124 must be formed between the step surfaces 107A, 107B.

Yet another alternate embodiment of the invention, includes a taperedjoint 130 as shown in FIGS. 17A-18B wherein a tapered surface 132A ismated with a tapered surface 132B. A tapered step 134A, 134B is thuscreated on the insert tube 16 and the receiver tube 20, respectively.The leading shoulders 136A, 136B are formed to avoid the problems ofregistration of the insert tube 16 and receiver tube 20 axially and toprevent the difficulties inherent in sharp corners. Similarly, thetrailing shoulders 138A, 138B are formed to fit against the leadingshoulders 136B, 136A, respectively. The engagement length 140 ispreferably about one inch in accordance with the previous embodiments.The shoulder height 142A, 142B is preferably approximately 0.015 inches.The tapered joint configuration of FIGS. 17A-18B can be bonded by any ofthe methods discussed above.

In addition, several improvements on a single step spool design areillustrated in FIGS. 18A-19E. In the embodiments of FIGS. 18A, 18B thetapered steps 134A, 134B are fitted together as discussed above, butinclude the radii 141A and 141B at the interfaces between the leadingshoulder 136A and trailing shoulder 138B and between the leadingshoulder 136A and trailing shoulder 138A, respectively. The result is anelimination of the sharp corner that results from merely breaking anedge as discussed above. Instead the stress concentration inherent insharp corners is gone. The engagement length 140 should typically be atleast one tenth of the tube outside diameter 17 (FIGS. 1-4) butpreferably is over one fifth, although it may be less in very largespools 10 and reels 180. In FIG. 18B a very small radius 141A, 141B isused on the radiused corners 137A, 137B, whereas in the configuration ofFIG. 18A, the radii 141A, 141B are approximately one quarter of the wallthickness 82A, 82B. The base width 143 is preferably at least half thethickness of the wall thicknesses 82A, 82B, thus giving a taperedcantilever effect to the steps 134A, 134B. In the preferred embodiment,the radii 141A, 141B are at least 0.015 inches and are preferably 0.025inches.

Referring to FIGS. 19A-19E, the engagement region 76 of the single stepSpool 15 of FIGS. 3-4 is illustrated in detail. The features illustratedin FIGS. 19A-19E are critical to the construction of the single stepspool 15, but apply equally well to the multi-step spool 11 of FIGS.1-2.

The midline 131A is located approximately halfway between the flanges18, 22 at the point of maximum moment during a radial drop test in whichthe spool 10 lands on the rims 34 of the flanges 18, 22. In theembodiment of FIG. 19A, the joint interface 67A is offset to eliminateany possible break in the material between the insert wall 51 and thereceiver wall 45 at the outside diameter 17 and the midline. Similarly,the embodiment of FIG. 19B has both joint interfaces 67A and 67B offsetfrom the midline 131A. In the alternative, the midline 131B could bepositioned halfway between the flanges 18, 22, thus offsetting both thejoint interfaces 67A and 67B from the region of maximum stress (maximummoment), offsetting the joint interface 67A the furthest distance. Thisoffsetting construction is applicable to all stepped joints of theinvention.

In the embodiments of FIGS. 19C and 19D, the radius 69A at the interfacebetween the shoulders 68 and 74 and the radius 69B at the interfacebetween the shoulders 70 and 72 relieves the stress which would resultfrom any sharp corner. In FIG. 19C, the radii 69A, 69B are equal to theshoulder heights 79A, 79B which are themselves preferably equal. In FIG.19C, the radii 69A, 69B are preferably greater than 0.015 inches, butthe shoulders 68, 74 and 70, 72 still fit at right angles to the stepsurfaces 88A, 88B of the steps 66, 64.

In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 19E, the clearance 71 between theshoulders 68 and 74 purposely ensures a gap at the inside surfaces 92A,92B in order that contact is assured between the shoulders 70, 72 at thejoint interface 67A. Thus, in this embodiment, the outermost surface 31of the tube 29 has no discontinuities to subject the tube 29 to stressconcentrations or reduced cross-sectional area when loaded during fielduse or testing.

An alternative embodiment for a spool 10 is the three piece spool ofFIGS. 20-23D. The configurations of FIGS. 24A, 24B apply to three-pieceand two-piece spools. In this embodiment, a tube 144 is formed either byextrusion or by molding to be fitted to a flange 146A, 146B on eitherend. The flanges 146A, 146B are preferably identical having a thickness147A, 147B respectively in other dimensions corresponding to theembodiments of FIGS. 1-4.

The flanges 146A, 146B each have formed thereon a stub tube 148A, 148B,respectively. In one embodiment, the steps 150A, 150B are formed in thestub tube 148A, 148B, respectively, to receive the tube 144 at itsinside diameter 145. The stub tubes 148A, 148B are bonded to the ends ofthe tube 144 by the methods described above.

In an alternative embodiment, preferable in many respects, but requiringa molded tube 144, the tube steps 152A, 152B are formed in the ends ofthe tube 144. In this way, the bonding method of the multi-step spool 11can be used. However, a single tube step 152A, 152B is shown in each ofthe ends of the tube 144. Multiple steps can be formed in a molded tube144 or cut into an extruded one.

The step widths 154A, 154B in the tube 144 need to have sufficientbearing surface as described above with respect to the FIGS. 1-4. A stepwidth 154A, 154B of one-half inch is preferred. The bonding methods andstepping concepts apply to the three-piece configurations.

FIGS. 23A-23D illustrate the details of the engagement region 40 of thespool 10. In the embodiment of FIG. 23A, a butt joint 156 connects theflange 146A to the tube 144 by one of the bonding methods discussed,completely covering the stub tube 148A. The stub tube 148A is stepped asdiscussed above to have the step 150A inside the tube 144 while the tubeis also cut or molded to have a step 152A. The configuration of FIG. 23Billustrates multiple steps 151A, 153A defined by the shoulders 155abutting the shoulders 156 of the tube 144 formed and sized asdiscussed.

In the illustrated embodiments of FIGS. 23C-23D, a support sleeve 157replaces the stub tube 148A. This construction is ideal for tubes 144 ofpaperboard that are strong, inexpensive and can be cut to any length.The width 260 is preferably at least one tenth of the outside tubediameter 37 (see FIGS. 2, 4, 21, 22), while the thickness 262 isapproximately equal to the tube wall thickness 263 for plastic tubes144, and depends on the material of which the tube 144 is made. The tube144 and the stub tube 156 or support sleeve 157 should effectively bematched to have equal shear strength. That is, the tube 144 may beplastic, metal, rolled sheet metal or paperboard. Each material hasmanufacturing and structural advantages as discussed herein,particularly for the three-piece configuration shown in FIGS. 23C and23D.

The buttressed support sleeve of FIG. 23D narrows to a thickness 264away from the flange 146A further reducing stress discontinuities whichresult from precipitous changes in cross-sections of materials, such asin the embodiment of FIG. 23C. However the radii 266, 268 in FIG. 23Cand radii 270, 272 of FIG. 23D are all greater than 0.015 inches for atube diameter 37 of 2 inches and a wall thickness 263 of 0.105 inches.Larger radii 266, 268, 270, 272 of approximately one quarter of thethickness 263 of the tube 144 are preferred. One quarter of thethickness 262 of the support sleeve is an alternative baseline dimensionwhere the thickness 262 exceeds the tube thickness 263. The length 260should be greater than four times the tube thickness 263 and greaterthan four times the thickness 262. However, one quarter of the tubediameter 37 is preferred for the length 260 in most embodiments.

FIGS. 24A and 24B show another improvement over the spools of the priorart by including a ribbed flanged 160. The ribbed flange contains a backplate 162 on which are formed ribs 164 protruding normal thereto andextending radially thereacross. A rim 166 is formed of the same materialof dimensions similar to those of the ribs 164. The rim height 168corresponds to a similar dimension of the rim 166 in the embodimentshown in FIG. 24B. The thicknesses 170, 172 and 174 in the preferredembodiment are of the same dimensions, approximately 0.040 to 0.100inches. Although the thickness of the rim 170 may be optimized to besomewhat different than the thickness 172 of the wall or the thickness174 of the ribs, molding technology will generally dictate equalthicknesses of all walls for purposes of uniform cooling and propermolding times at all points. That is, variations in thickness tend toincrease mold waiting (cooling) times and give parts which areinconsistent at various locations.

An arbor sleeve 176 is provided around the arbor aperture 126 requiredof all spools 10. Each rib 164 is preferably connected to an inner rim177 spaced from the arbor sleeve 176 and runs radially to connect to therim 166 and to the outer circumference of the flange 18, 22 of the spool10. In a preferred embodiment, gussets 178 are formed to stabilize theend plate 179 and the arbor sleeve 176 with respect to one another.

An alternate embodiment of the invention is the reel 180 illustrated inFIGS. 25-36. The reel is formed to rotate about an axis 181 whenreceiving a stranded product or when dispensing the same. The reel 180is formed with a tube 182 having a length 183. The tube 182 is typicallyformed of a plastic, wound and laminated paperboard, or a rolled orextruded metal. At each end of the tube 182 is attached a flange 184.

The flange 184 has a thickness 185 across its back plate 186. To theback plate 186 are integrally formed the ribs 188 having a height 187and a thickness 189. As illustrated in FIGS. 26-27, around the peripheryof each of the flanges 184 is attached a rim 190 having a thickness 191.In the preferred embodiment, the thicknesses 185, 189 and 191 are allequal. As discussed above, mold design and the manufacturing cycle timesare dependent on the thickness of each section.

In the preferred embodiment, a support sleeve 192 is molded to theflange 184, and integrally a part thereof of to fit inside the tube 182.Inside the center of the support sleeve 192 is the arbor sleeve 194,concentric with and surrounding an arbor aperture 196. The ribs 198extend radially between the arbor sleeve 194 and the support sleeve 192.

The outside diameter 200 of the tube 182 and the inside surface 240defined a wall thickness 204 as illustrated in FIGS. 28-30. A channel210 is formed by a channel wall 212 formed outside the outside diameter200 of the tube 182. The support sleeve 192 forms the opposite side ofthe channel 210. The ends of the tube 182 fit into the channel 210 ineach flange 184, abutting the end plate 214 in each instance.

In the preferred embodiment, the length 216 of the support sleeve 192 isapproximately as shown in FIG. 29 Nevertheless, for structural integrityrather than the manufacturability criteria, the extended length 217shown in FIG. 30 is preferable. That is, the length 216 is easier tomanufacture and is approximately twice the flange thickness 215 or more.By contrast, the extended length 217 is approximately three to fourtimes the flange thickness 215 and extends approximately one to twoinches into the tube 182 of a 12 inch diameter reel.

A fundamental purpose of the panel wall 212 is the provision of alocation outside the flange 184 for securely fastening the flange 184 tothe tube 182. That is, additional operations and risks arise from anyfastening technology which touches the tube 182 between the respectiveback plates 186 at either end of the tube 182. In the apparatus of theinvention, a staple 218 or a screw 220 may penetrate the channel wall212 and the tube 182. In the preferred embodiment, a fastener such as ascrew 220 or staple 218 penetrates into the support sleeve 192, furtherreducing or preventing any tearing or breakage by the tube 182.Depending on the nature of the material from which the flanges 184 aremanufactured, a glue 222 can be applied as shown in FIG. 30. However,when the preferred materials from the olefinic plastics are used, aplastic material is a preferable material for the tube 182. The tube 182can then be bonded to each of the flanges 184 by the methods discussedabove including ultrasonic, spin, hot plate, induction and hot gaswelding.

Hot gas welding is the preferred method for welding very large parts. Inhot gas welding, a plastic filler rod, preferably of the same basematerial as the spool 10 or reel 180 is passed through a jet of hot gas,typically nitrogen or air. The hot gas softens the rod which then flowsinto the area to be joined, melting and bonding the base materials toeach other and to the material from the filler rod.

The apertures 224, 226 are formed for various purposes includinginspection, connection by a drive mechanism and so forth as discussedfor apertures on the spools 10 above. In addition, however, the splines228 are preferably molded on the channel wall 212 as shown in FIGS. 25and 31A-31B. These splines 228 provide both resilience and a certainamount of strain while also providing a high load in a localized area togrip the tube 182 inside the channel 210. Splines may also be molded aspart of the support sleeve 192 as described above. Since extrusionproduces more accurate outside dimensions, generally, for plastic tubes182, and wrapping around a mandrel produces more accurate insidedimensions for paperboard tubes 182, splines 228 are preferably formedto contact the least accurate surface of a tube 182, whatever itsmaterial. Thus, splines 228 are located as shown on the channel wall 212in FIG. 31A and on the support sleeve 192 in FIG. 31B, according to theconfiguration of the tube 182.

In the preferred embodiment, a receptacle 230 is formed in the supportsleeve 192 as shown in FIGS. 25, 32 and 34. The resulting aperture 232is sized to receive a pin 234. The pin 234 preferably has a head 236 anda row of barbs 238. The head 236 permits driving of the pin 234 into theaperture 232 of the receptacle 230. In addition, the head 236 preventsdriving of the pin 234 too far.

The barb 238 serves the purpose of locking the pin 234 into the aperture232 by applying very localized loading on the inside surface 240 of thetube 182. In an alternate embodiment, a barb 242 may be formed directlyon the support sleeve 192 at a plurality of positions around thecircumference of the support sleeve 192. Each of the barbs 242 thenlikewise applies a very large, focused load on the inside surface 240 ofthe tube 182.

A variation on the use of the barb 242 is an aperture 244 formed in thetube 182 for receiving the barb 242. Thus, rather than relying onfriction or deflection or on cutting or gouging a cardboard tube 182, aplastic or cardboard tube 182 could benefit from a positive lockingeffect of the aperture 244 holding the barb 242 therein.

FIG. 35 shows an alternate embodiment which permits the use of fastenerssuch as the screw 220 and the staple 218, but lack a support sleeve 292.This is a very economical construction with a minimum of moldmanufacturing complexity. However, the configuration of FIG. 35 does nothave the benefit of the length 216 or the extended length 217 of theembodiment of FIGS. 25-34.

In one embodiment, the flange 184 is configured to provide a reliefdistance 250 between the edge 252 of the rim 190 and the ribs 188.Likewise, the outer surface 254 of the end plate 214 is positionedaxially at the same approximate distance as the edge 252 of the rim 190.A label 256 is configured with an aperture 258 to fit around the endplate 214. Thus, the label 256 fits within the relief distance 250. Thebenefit of this configuration is that stacking, and otherwise using thereels 180 and spools 10, need not destroy the labels 256 placed on theend thereof. Clearly, the relief distance 250 may be manufactured in thespools of FIG. 24A, and manufactured to be used in any of the disclosedembodiments.

The examples of spools 10, 11 and 15 and the reels 180 are illustrativeof sizes standardized within the wire industry. Nevertheless, themanufacturing techniques discussed and the configurations illustratedapply to very large and small sizes for the applications discussed. Forexample, the spools 10 may be manufactured by rotomolding, also calledtumble molding in a low-pressure cavity tumbled on a gimbal to coat theinside surfaces of the cavity evenly with melting resin granules. Theresulting insert and receiver can be assembled by any method discussed,but most economically by hot gas welding. Similarly, the reel 180 can bemanufactured in sizes requiring less than a 12 inch flange diameter, butmay be rotomolded in 4, 6 and 8 foot flange diameters. Moreover, theribs 186 may be structured to run radially and circumferentially,crossing each other, adding stiffness to support larger flange sizes.Honeycombed lattices of ribs 186 are also within contemplation, tofacilitate reduced rib thicknesses 189 in very large reels 180. Althougha single spool or reel could be rotomolded in a very large size, theconstructions shown require far smaller tooling, permit a variety ofsizes of the tubes 29, 144, 182, particularly in length. However, thechannel walls 212 can be made in multiple sizes on a single flange 184.Changes in the length 183 can be accommodated in manufacture of thetubes 23, 144, 182. Multiple potential diameter 200 of the tubes 182 canalso be accommodated. The support sleeves 192 are made to extend onlyflush with the backplate 186, but are molded at several diameters on asingle flange 184. By suitable choice of the setback distance 280 on theflange 184, the length 216 of the support sleeve 192 still providesadequate bearing surface to stably support the tube 182.

The preferred tube in the wire industry is a right circular cylinder ona circular flange, but perforated, slatted, axially segmented,diametrally segmented, assembled box shaped, rectangular, hexagonal orother polygonal tubes and flanges are within contemplation. Likewise,automatic starting holes for wire may be made, penetrating the tubeportion of any spool or reel may be made by drilling or may be moldedinto the parts to leave the proper penetration after assembly.

To recycle the spools 10 or reels 180, the plastic parts may bedisassembled at the use site. Even a reel 8 feet in diameter could becut up by any saw, including a chain saw, saber saw, circular saw or thelike. Thus the volume can be substantially reduced for recycling.Polyolefins have the advantage that they do not lose any substantialportion of their mechanical and molding properties when recycled.

The embodiments disclosed are illustrative only. Obvious variations ofthe invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Therefore,the embodiments illustrated do not serve to limit the invention which islimited only by the claims hereinafter set forth.

What is claimed and desired to be secured by United States LettersPatent is:
 1. A reel comprising:a first flange, homogeneously molded ofa first material, and having a first face on an inward side thereof; asecond flange, homogeneously molded of the first material, and having asecond face on an inward side thereof, facing and spaced axially fromthe first face; a tubular segment, formed of a second material differentfrom the first material, and connected to extend from the first face tothe second face at a substantially uniform diameter, the tubular segmenthaving a first end and a second end fixedly fastened to the first flangeand the second flange, respectively, to resist an axial force urgingapart the first flange and second flange; and the first and secondflanges each having a sleeve homogeneously molded therewith andextending axially from the respective first and second faces to receivetherealong in an axial direction the first and second ends,respectively, at substantially the uniform diameter, the first andsecond faces being substantially planar between the tubular segment andan outer circumference of the respective first and second flanges. 2.The reel of claim 1, further comprising a fastener positioned to extendradially between the tube and the sleeve.
 3. The reel of claim 1,wherein each of the sleeves extends into the tubular segment.
 4. Thereel of claim 1, wherein the tubular segment extends into each of thesleeves.
 5. The reel of claim 1, wherein the uniform diameter is anouter diameter uniform between the first and second faces.
 6. The reelof claim 1, wherein the first flange further comprises ribs attached atinner edges thereof to a back face opposite the first face to extendbetween an inner rim and an outer rim, the inner rim and outer rimextending axially from the back face to a distance beyond the ribs forprotecting a label attached to the outer edges of the ribs.
 7. The reelof claim 1 wherein each of the first flange and the second flange isfurther comprised of ribs molded thereto, having a thickness andextending axially a width away therefrom for increasing the stiffness ofsaid respective first and second flange, the ratio of the width to thethickness being about 5 or more.
 8. The reel of claim 7 wherein theratio is 10 or more.
 9. A reel comprising:a first flange homogeneouslymolded of a first material to have a first face on an inward sidethereof and a first cylindrical sleeve homogeneously molded to extendaxially from the first face; a second flange homogeneously molded tohave a second face on an inward side thereof spaced axially from thefirst face, and having a second cylindrical sleeve homogeneously moldedto extend axially from the second face; a tube of a second, differentmaterial secured proximate a first end thereof to the first cylindricalsleeve and proximate a second end thereof to the second cylindricalsleeve, the tube extending from the first face to the second face andfastened to the respective first and second flanges to support an axialforce urging apart the first flange and second flange; and the first andsecond faces being substantially planar between the tube and an outercircumference of the respective first and second flange.
 10. The reel ofclaim 9 wherein the first cylindrical sleeve and second cylindricalsleeve extend axially toward the second flange and first flange,respectively.
 11. The reel of claim 9 wherein the first cylindricalsleeve and second cylindrical sleeve extend axially away from the secondflange and first flange, respectively.
 12. The reel of claim 11 whereinthe first cylindrical sleeve and second cylindrical sleeve extendaxially toward the second flange and first flange, respectively.
 13. Thereel of claim 9 wherein the first end and second end are glued to thefirst and second cylindrical sleeves, respectively.
 14. The reel ofclaim 9 wherein the first and second ends are connected to the first andsecond flanges, respectively, by a first fastener proximate the firstend and a second fastener proximate the second end respectively.
 15. Thereel of claim 14 wherein the first fastener extends radially between thefirst end and the first cylindrical sleeve, and the second fastenerextends radially between the second end and the second cylindricalsleeve.
 16. The reel of claim 9 wherein the first end and second end ofthe tube are glued to the first and second faces, respectively.
 17. Thereel of claim 9 wherein the first sleeve forms a first channel extendingaxially into the first face, and the second sleeve forms a secondchannel extending axially into the second face.
 18. The reel of claim 9,wherein the first and second sleeves are homogeneously molded with therespective first and second flanges.
 19. The reel of claim 9, whereinthe first and second sleeves extend into the tube.
 20. The reel of claim9, wherein the tube extends into each of the sleeves.
 21. The reel ofclaim 9, wherein the first flange further comprises ribs attached atinner edges thereof to a back face opposite the first face to extendbetween an inner rim and an outer rim, the inner rim and outer rimextending axially from the back face to beyond the ribs.
 22. The reel ofclaim 9 wherein each of the first flange and the second flange isfurther comprised of ribs molded thereto, having a thickness andextending axially a width away therefrom for increasing the stiffness ofsaid respective first and second flange, an aspect ratio of the width tothe thickness being about 5 or more.
 23. The reel of claim 22 whereinthe aspect ratio is about 10 or more.
 24. A reel comprising:a firstflange having a first face on an inward side thereof; a second flange,having a second face on an inward side thereof, facing and spacedaxially from the first face, the first and second flanges being formedof a first material; a tube secured between the first flange and secondflange to support an axial force urging apart the first flange andsecond flange; and first and second cylindrical sleeves homogeneouslymolded with and extending axially from the respective first and secondfaces to axially receive, enclosed away from the first and second faces,first and second ends, respectively, of the tube; a first fastenerextending radially between the first cylindrical sleeve and tube toextend into a wall of the tube, securing the first cylindrical sleeve tothe tube proximate the first end; and a second fastener extendingradially between the second cylindrical sleeve and the tube to extendinto a wall of the tube, securing the second cylindrical sleeve to thetube proximate the second end.